Identification

Map

Structure in General

Building type

skyscraper

Building status

existing [completed]

Facade color

light brown

Architectural style

neo-gothic

Usages

Main Usage

church (baptist)

Facts

An Indiana limestone curtain wall disguises the building's steel frame, which was used to speed construction and support the immense weight of the seventy-two-bell carillon housed in the tower's upper stories, donated in honor of Laura Spelman Rockefeller.

Built in an era when most Manhattan churches were literally being overshadowed by corporate and residential skyscrapers, the 392-foot high tower provided the new congregation with a strong presence on the skyline and in Morningside Heights.

Located in Morningside Heights on a high bluff overlooking the Hudson River, The Riverside Church is one of the best known religious structures in New York City.

An ecumenical church, with its roots in the Baptist faith, its history reflects the modernist religious theology of its founding pastor Harry Emerson Fosdick.

The church was financed with gifts from members of the church, including the industrialist and philanthropist John D. Rockefeller, Jr.

The neo-Gothic style complex consists of three distinct sections: a five-bay nave and chancel extending north toward West 122nd Street, a mid-block twenty-two story tower housing the narthex, Christ Chapel, belfry, offices and meeting rooms, as well as a one-and-half story "cloister" passage extending east to Claremont Avenue.

The architects Henry C. Pelton and Allen & Collens based their design on mainly French Gothic structures, especially the Cathedral at Chartres.

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